wdk450
Well-known member
Gang:
I have a couple of fresh water system problems right now, and could use some learned advice from the Heartland Owners collective intelligence.
First problem is that I suspect I have a hard water (calcium carbonate) partial clog in my main city water lines. I have low pressure, slow flow at ALL fresh water spigots, while if I disconnect my fresh water incoming hose, I seem to have good pressure and flow. I use a particulate filter in the feed hose continuously, and where I test the pressure/flow is AFTER the filter. I HAVE found white crystals in the filter screens before some of the faucets. Until I get my PEX crimper set from E-Bay (due Friday) and I can disassemble the main incoming tubing, rod it out, and back flush it, I was thinking of filling my filter housing with vinegar, running a faucet some to get the vinegar into the lines, and then let it sit as long as possible. Due to problem #2, I won't be drinking or bathing from the fresh system anytime soon, and would flush the system with fresh water for a while to remove the vinegar when I am ready.
Problem #2: The dumpy RV park I am staying at (and have a month rent prepaid until Sept 26th), just had its potable water well casing collapse a few days back. The manager instructed me to connect my rig to the landscape watering system that is drawn directly from a nearby river. THIS WATER IS NOT SAFE FOR DRINKING. So, when they finally get a new well drilled, and a safe drinking water system online, I will have to disinfect MY RIG's drinking water system. Right now my fresh water tank doesn't hold water (another job waiting for cooler weather) so I will have to get the disinfecting agent into my water system by another route. I am thinking that I can follow the same idea I have for my vinegar wash, and simply put the chlorine stuff in the water filter housing, run highly chlorinated water into all of the lines, let the lines sit at least overnight, then fresh water flush all of the lines until the taste of chlorine is gone. BTW, I keep some spa shock granulated chlorine around for just such a purpose.
What say you???
I have a couple of fresh water system problems right now, and could use some learned advice from the Heartland Owners collective intelligence.
First problem is that I suspect I have a hard water (calcium carbonate) partial clog in my main city water lines. I have low pressure, slow flow at ALL fresh water spigots, while if I disconnect my fresh water incoming hose, I seem to have good pressure and flow. I use a particulate filter in the feed hose continuously, and where I test the pressure/flow is AFTER the filter. I HAVE found white crystals in the filter screens before some of the faucets. Until I get my PEX crimper set from E-Bay (due Friday) and I can disassemble the main incoming tubing, rod it out, and back flush it, I was thinking of filling my filter housing with vinegar, running a faucet some to get the vinegar into the lines, and then let it sit as long as possible. Due to problem #2, I won't be drinking or bathing from the fresh system anytime soon, and would flush the system with fresh water for a while to remove the vinegar when I am ready.
Problem #2: The dumpy RV park I am staying at (and have a month rent prepaid until Sept 26th), just had its potable water well casing collapse a few days back. The manager instructed me to connect my rig to the landscape watering system that is drawn directly from a nearby river. THIS WATER IS NOT SAFE FOR DRINKING. So, when they finally get a new well drilled, and a safe drinking water system online, I will have to disinfect MY RIG's drinking water system. Right now my fresh water tank doesn't hold water (another job waiting for cooler weather) so I will have to get the disinfecting agent into my water system by another route. I am thinking that I can follow the same idea I have for my vinegar wash, and simply put the chlorine stuff in the water filter housing, run highly chlorinated water into all of the lines, let the lines sit at least overnight, then fresh water flush all of the lines until the taste of chlorine is gone. BTW, I keep some spa shock granulated chlorine around for just such a purpose.
What say you???